A1 Refereed original research article in a scientific journal
Redox regulation of PEP activity during seedling establishment in Arabidopsis thaliana
Authors: Manuel Guinea Díaz, Tamara Hernández-Verdeja, Dmitry Kremnev, Tim Crawford, Carole Dubreuil, Åsa Strand
Publisher: Nature Publishing Group
Publication year: 2018
Journal: Nature Communications
Article number: 50 (2018)
Volume: 9
Number of pages: 12
ISSN: 2041-1723
DOI: https://doi.org/10.1038/s41467-017-02468-2
Self-archived copy’s web address: https://research.utu.fi/converis/portal/detail/Publication/30350279
Activation of the plastid-encoded RNA polymerase is tightly controlled
and involves a network of phosphorylation and, as yet unidentified,
thiol-mediated events. Here, we characterize PLASTID REDOX INSENSITIVE2,
a redox-regulated protein required for full PEP-driven transcription.
PRIN2 dimers can be reduced into the active monomeric form by
thioredoxins through reduction of a disulfide bond. Exposure to light
increases the ratio between the monomeric and dimeric forms of PRIN2.
Complementation of prin2-2 with different PRIN2 protein variants
demonstrates that the monomer is required for light-activated
PEP-dependent transcription and that expression of the nuclear-encoded
photosynthesis genes is linked to the activity of PEP. Activation of PEP
during chloroplast development likely is the source of a retrograde
signal that promotes nuclear LHCB expression. Thus, regulation of
PRIN2 is the thiol-mediated mechanism required for full PEP activity,
with PRIN2 monomerization via reduction by TRXs providing a mechanistic
link between photosynthetic electron transport and activation of
photosynthetic gene expression.
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